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"If we can disarm Iraq through inspection and avoid a war, I think that would be in everybody's interests," said El-Baradei
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WASHINGTON,
January 7 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – U.N. arms inspectors
"haven't seen a smoking gun, but we still have a lot of work to
do before we come to the conclusion that Iraq is clean,"
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohamed
El-Baradei told CNN Tuesday, January 7.
The
inspectors still need "a few months" to complete their work
in Iraq, he said, adding "it is too early to come to a
conclusion."
He
said that by January 27, "we will have a status report, but not a
complete report or a final report," reported Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
"I've
been saying for a number of weeks now that the international community
should bear with us," El-Baradei told ABC television.
"An
inspection takes time," he said. "If we can disarm Iraq
through inspection and avoid a war, I think that would be in
everybody's interests."
El-Baradei
added that U.N. weapons inspectors need more specific intelligence
from Washington to aid in their probe.
The
administration of President George W. Bush is "sharing
information, but I think we need more information," he told ABC.
"We've
been getting general information, but we need more specific
information to act on," he said.
"We
are in contact with the administration, and I hope in the next few
weeks we'll be getting much more information for us to be able to zero
in on any suspicious activities in Iraq," said El-Baradei.
On
December 8, Iraq handed the new U.N. inspection mission an 11,807-page
dossier confirming it has no weapons of mass destruction, in line with
U.N. Security Council Resolution 1441.
The
main part of the Iraqi declaration covers Iraq's chemical and
biological weapons activities and ballistic missiles with a range
exceeding 150 kilometers (93 miles).
Another
2,100 pages on Iraq's nuclear program have been studied at the IAEA
headquarters in Vienna.
Meanwhile,
U.N. inspectors used helicopters Tuesday for the first time since
resuming operations in November, as they stepped up the hunt for
Iraq’s alleged banned arms.
Three
white helicopters emblazoned with the U.N. logo took off from
Al-Rashid air base in the southeastern outskirts of the capital
accompanied by two Iraqi helicopters.
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U.N. weapons inspectors arrive at a water treatment plant at Jurf al-Sakher
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A
dozen U.N. experts were aboard the aircraft, which took two hours to
cover the 400 kilometers to the western town of Al-Qum close to the
Syrian border.
Their
target was a nearby processing plant at Al-Akachat, formerly used to
extract uranium from ore quarried in the surrounding hills.
The
team donned masks and protective clothing before heading into the
plant, which is now used to process phosphates.
U.N.
inspectors already toured the site once since resuming operations in
Iraq on November 27 after a four-year hiatus.
But
for the December 10 visit, they had to make the time-consuming road
journey across the desert.
U.N.
spokesman Hiro Ueki said a total of six helicopters were now available
to the inspectors after being flown in in parts from the mission's
rear base in Cyprus.
Flights
had been due to start last week, but were postponed due to
"technical reasons", both Ueki and Iraqi officials said.
The
inspectors will use the aircraft both to speed them around the country
for no-notice visits and to carry out aerial inspections of suspect
sites.
Over
the weekend, the inspectors opened a new regional office in the
northern capital of Mosul and began inspections in Iraq's southern
capital of Basra.
But
the intensified activity has sparked the first howls of protest from
Iraq after several weeks of painstaking cooperation.
On
Sunday, January 5, a U.N. team sealed off the whole compound around
the headquarters of Iraq's liaison body, the National Monitoring
Authority, during an inspection of an adjacent building, leaving
Iraq's ambassador to the United Nations, Mohammed al-Duri, locked
inside the building for more than six hours.
And
on Monday, January 6, President Saddam Hussein lashed out at the U.N.
mission in a keynote speech marking Armed Forces Day.
"Instead
of searching for so-called weapons of mass destruction to expose the
lies of the liars (U.S. and Britain), the inspection teams have been
compiling lists of Iraqi scientists, asking questions with undeclared
purposes, and inquiring about army camps and non-prohibited
armament," Saddam said.
"All
this, or at least most of it, is sheer intelligence activity."
As
their colleagues took to the skies for the first time, four other U.N.
teams drove four-wheel vehicles as they headed out on a 39th day of
inspections, Iraqi information ministry officials said.
One
team visited a plant at Jurf al-Sakhar, some 70 kilometers south of
the capital, engaged in production of the Al-Sumud short-range missile
which Iraq is still entitled to produce under U.N. resolutions.
Another
team visited the nearby Al-Motasam factory, the Iraqi officials said.
A
team of biologists toured the Saddam Cancer Research Center in the
capital, while a team of nuclear experts visited a cement plant at
Al-Kubaisa, 150 kilometers to its west, along with the nearby Al-Bakr
airfield.